Definition of "daub"
daub
noun
countable and uncountable, plural daubs
verb
third-person singular simple present daubs, present participle daubing, simple past and past participle daubed
(intransitive, transitive) To apply (something) to a surface in hasty or crude strokes.
Quotations
[…] Mrs. Gibson could not well come up to the girl’s bedroom every night and see that she daubed her face and neck over with the cosmetics so carefully provided for her.
1864 August – 1866 January, [Elizabeth] Gaskell, “The Bride at Home”, in Wives and Daughters. An Every-day Story. […], volume I, London: Smith, Elder and Co., […], published 1866, page 180
(transitive) To paint (a picture, etc.) in a coarse or unskilful manner.
Quotations
If a Picture is daub’d with many bright and glaring Colours, the vulgar Eye admires it as an excellent Piece […]
1725, Isaac Watts, chapter 3, in Logick: Or, The Right Use of Reason in the Enquiry after Truth, […], 2nd edition, London: […] John Clark and Richard Hett, […], Emanuel Matthews, […], and Richard Ford, […], published 1726, part II (Of Judgment and Proposition), section 1, page 189
If some gay picture, vilely daubed, were seen / With grass of azure, and a sky of green, / Th’impatient laughter we’d suppress in vain, / And deem the painter jesting, or insane.
1826, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, An Essay on Mind, Book I, in The Earlier Poems of Elizabeth Barrett Browning, 1826-1833, London: Bartholomew Robson, 1878, pp. 25-26
(transitive, obsolete) To put on without taste; to deck gaudily.
Quotations
Yet shall Whitehall the Innocent, the Good, / See these men dance all daub’d with Lace and Blood.
1697, John Dryden, “On the Three Dukes killing the Beadle on Sunday Morning, Febr. the 26th, 1670/1” in John Denham et al., Poems on affairs of state from the time of Oliver Cromwell, to the abdication of K. James the Second, London, p. 148